THE LEGACY OF CHARLES SPARREL

The 19th-Century Columbus Architect who made so many Columbus buildings still in use, and enjoyed, to this day.

GETTING TO KNOW CHARLES SPARREL

When most people think of or visit Columbus, Indiana, they think of modern architecture, but Columbus also is proud of a wonderful architectural heritage dating back to the late 1800s in the works found throughout the city by Charles Franklin Sparrell (see photos, below).

Sparrel was the most influential architect in Columbus during the 1880s and 1890s, yet little is known about his personal life, other than that he arrived on the scene in Columbus around 1881. He was born in Boston in 1852, and attended a technical institute in Massachusetts, though it is not known if his studies were in the field of architecture.

He also is believed to have worked for Samuel Hege & Company lumber company as a shop foreman in 1882. Yet by 1890, Sparrell had designed not only the original Crump Theater, but also the Methodist church and numerous personal residences. By this time, he could advertise himself as an architect, and did so by claiming “school, church, opera house plans a specialty.” He had offices listed at 330, 332, and 334 Fifth Street (currently the site of a modern bank), and had employees working for him.

Several of Mr. Sparrell’s surviving buildings are of Victorian Romanesque style. Among these are:

Columbus City Hall (now legal offices and apartments)

Maple Grove/Garfield School (now BCSC Admin. Bldg.)

McKinley School (now McKinley Apartments)

Other noted public downtown buildings designed by Mr. Sparrell are:

First United Methodist Church

Washington School

U.S. Post Office (now Viewpoint Books)

The Fehring Block

The International Order of Odd Fellows Building (now condominiums)

Personal residences were also designed by Charles Sparrell. Known homes designed by Mr. Sparrell, and still in use today, are at:

Charles Sparrell left his mark on Columbus during approximately 20 years that he called it his home. He left Columbus sometime around 1900. After that time, his life remains somewhat of a mystery. He died in Newport, Kentucky in 1934, at the age of 82. His death certificate states that he was a pattern maker and draftsman, and that is about all that is known of this man who left us with so many grand structures in Columbus.